freebsd-dev/crypto/openssh/README.hpn
Brooks Davis 8998619212 Add support for dynamically adjusted buffers to allow the full use of
the bandwidth of long fat pipes (i.e. 100Mbps+ trans-oceanic or
trans-continental links).  Bandwidth-delay products up to 64MB are
supported.

Also add support (not compiled by default) for the None cypher.  The
None cypher can only be enabled on non-interactive sessions (those
without a pty where -T was not used) and must be enabled in both
the client and server configuration files and on the client command
line.  Additionally, the None cypher will only be activated after
authentication is complete.  To enable the None cypher you must add
-DNONE_CIPHER_ENABLED to CFLAGS via the make command line or in
/etc/make.conf.

This code is a style(9) compliant version of these features extracted
from the patches published at:

http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh/

Merging this patch has been a collaboration between me and Bjoern.

Reviewed by:	bz
Approved by:	re (kib), des (maintainer)
2011-08-03 19:14:22 +00:00

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Notes:
NONE CIPHER:
To use the NONE option you must have the NoneEnabled switch set on the server
and you MUST have *both* NoneEnabled and NoneSwitch set to yes on the client.
The NONE feature works with ALL ssh subsystems (as far as we can tell)
as long as there is no tty allocated.
If a user uses the -T switch to prevent a tty being created the NONE cipher
will be disabled.
PERFORMANCE:
The performance increase will only be as good as the network and TCP stack
tuning on the reciever side of the connection allows. As a rule of thumb a
user will need at least 10Mb/s connection with a 100ms RTT to see a doubling
of performance.
The HPN-SSH home page http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/hpn-ssh
describes this in greater detail.
BUFFER SIZES:
- if HPN is disabled the receive buffer size will be set to the OpenSSH default
of 64K.
- if a HPN system connects to a non-HPN system the receive buffer will
be set to the HPNBufferSize value. The default is 2MB but user adjustable.
- If a HPN to HPN connection is established a number of different things might
happen based on the user options and conditions.
Conditions: HPNBufferSize NOT Set, TCPRcvBufPoll enabled, TCPRcvBuf NOT Set
Result: HPN Buffer Size = up to 64MB
This is the default state. The HPN buffer size will grow to a maximum of
64MB as the TCP receive buffer grows. The maximum HPN Buffer size of 64MB
is geared towards 10GigE transcontinental connections.
Conditions: HPNBufferSize NOT Set, TCPRcvBufPoll disabled, TCPRcvBuf NOT Set
Result: HPN Buffer Size = TCP receive buffer value.
Users on non-autotuning systesm should disable TCPRcvBufPoll in the
ssh_cofig and sshd_config
Conditions: HPNBufferSize SET, TCPRcvBufPoll disabled, TCPRcvBuf NOT Set
Result: HPN Buffer Size = minmum of TCP receive buffer and HPNBufferSize.
This would be the system defined TCP receive buffer (RWIN).
Conditions: HPNBufferSize SET, TCPRcvBufPoll disabled, TCPRcvBuf SET
Result: HPN Buffer Size = minmum of TCPRcvBuf and HPNBufferSize.
Generally there is no need to set both.
Conditions: HPNBufferSize SET, TCPRcvBufPoll enabled, TCPRcvBuf NOT Set
Result: HPN Buffer Size = grows to HPNBufferSize
The buffer will grow up to the maximum size specified here.
Conditions: HPNBufferSize SET, TCPRcvBufPoll enabled, TCPRcvBuf SET
Result: HPN Buffer Size = minmum of TCPRcvBuf and HPNBufferSize.
Generally there is no need to set both of these, especially on autotuning
systems. However, if the users wishes to override the autotuning this would
be one way to do it.
Conditions: HPNBufferSize NOT Set, TCPRcvBufPoll enabled, TCPRcvBuf SET
Result: HPN Buffer Size = TCPRcvBuf.
This will override autotuning and set the TCP recieve buffer to the user
defined value.
HPN SPECIFIC CONFIGURATION OPTIONS:
- HPNDisabled=[yes/no] client/server
In some situations, such as transfers on a local area network, the impact
of the HPN code produces a net decrease in performance. In these cases it is
helpful to disable the HPN functionality. By default HPNDisabled is set to no.
- HPNBufferSize=[int]KB client/server
This is the default buffer size the HPN functionality uses when interacting
with non-HPN SSH installations. Conceptually this is similar to the TcpRcvBuf
option as applied to the internal SSH flow control. This value can range from
1KB to 64MB (1-65536). Use of oversized or undersized buffers can cause
performance problems depending on the roud trip time of the network path.
The default size of this buffer is 2MB.
- TcpRcvBufPoll=[yes/no] client/server
Enable or disable the polling of the TCP receive buffer through the life
of the connection. You would want to make sure that this option is enabled
for systems making use of autotuning kernels (linux 2.4.24+, 2.6, MS Vista,
FreeBSD 7.x and later). Default is yes.
- TcpRcvBuf=[int]KB client
Set the TCP socket receive buffer to n Kilobytes. It can be set up to the
maximum socket size allowed by the system. This is useful in situations where
the TCP receive window is set low but the maximum buffer size is set higher
(as is typical). This works on a per TCP connection basis. You can also use
this to artifically limit the transfer rate of the connection. In these cases
the throughput will be no more than n/RTT. The minimum buffer size is 1KB.
Default is the current system wide TCP receive buffer size.
- NoneEnabled=[yes/no] client/server
Enable or disable the use of the None cipher. Care must always be used when
enabling this as it will allow users to send data in the clear. However, it
is important to note that authentication information remains encrypted even
if this option is enabled. Set to no by default.
- NoneSwitch=[yes/no] client
Switch the encryption cipher being used to the None cipher after
authentication takes place. NoneEnabled must be enabled on both the client
and server side of the connection. When the connection switches to the NONE
cipher a warning is sent to STDERR. The connection attempt will fail with an
error if a client requests a NoneSwitch from the server that does not
explicitly have NoneEnabled set to yes.
Note: The NONE cipher cannot be used in interactive (shell) sessions and it
will fail silently. Set to no by default.
CREDITS:
This patch was conceived, designed, and led by Chris Rapier (rapier@psc.edu)
The majority of the actual coding for versions up to HPN12v1 was performed
by Michael Stevens (mstevens@andrew.cmu.edu).
The MT-AES-CTR cipher was implemented by Ben Bennet (ben@psc.edu).
This work was financed, in part, by Cisco System, Inc., the National Library
of Medicine, and the National Science Foundation.